This Day in History — March 19
Today is the 78th day of 2021. There are 287 days left in the year.
TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT
2013: Pope Francis officially begins his ministry as the 266th pope, receiving the ring symbolising the papacy and a wool stole exemplifying his role as shepherd of his 1.2-billion-strong flock during a mass at the Vatican.
OTHER EVENTS
1799: Napoleon Bonaparte begins siege of Acre — nowAkko, Israel — which was defended by Turks.
1812: Spanish Cortes passes liberal constitution under a hereditary monarch.
1861: Maori War in New Zealand ends.
1920: The US Senate rejects for the second time the country’s involvement in the League of Nations by a vote of 49-35.
1932: Sydney Harbour Bridge in Australia officially opens.
1933: Italy’s dictator Benito Mussolini proposes a pact with Britain, France and Germany.
1944: Nazi German soldiers occupy Hungary.
1962: Relative calm returns to Algeria after ceasefire, ending seven years of warfare between French and Algerian Nationalists.
1970: Heads of government of West and East Germany, Willy Brandt and Willi Stoph, meet for the first time in Erfurt.
1971: At least 160 people perish in landslides north of Sao Paulo, Brazil.
1977: The president of the Republic of Congo, Marien Ngouabi, is assassinated at his official residence in Brazzaville.
1979: US House of Representatives begins televising its day-to-day business.
1987: US television evangelist Jim Bakker resigns as chairman of his PTL ministry organisation amid a sex-and-money scandal involving Jessica Hahn, a former church secretary.
1988: Two British soldiers are shot to death after they were dragged from a car and beaten by mourners attending an Irish Republican Army funeral in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
1989: Muslim gunners fire rockets into Christian areas of Lebanon.
1990: Latvia’s political Opposition claims victory in the republic’s first free elections in 50 years.
1993: Georgia shoots down a Russian warplane over the separatist Abkhazia region, killing its pilot and heightening tensions between the two countries.
1994: Cambodian Government seizes control of Pailin, the Khmer Rouge’s main stronghold.
1995: After giving up an attempt to become a major league baseball player, Michael Jordan returns to pro basketball with his former team, the Chicago Bulls. Finnish voters throw out the centre-right coalition government and give the opposition Social Democratic Party its biggest election victory since World War II.
1996: A discotheque fire kills at least 150 people in Manila, Philippines.
1998: Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic agrees to international demands to pull back special police from the troubled province of Kosovo.
2003: The US launches an attack against Iraq after a deadline for Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to go into exile expires.
2005: Tens of thousands of anti-war protesters demonstrate across Europe to mark the second anniversary of the US-led invasion of Iraq, with 45,000 marching from London’s Hyde Park past the American Embassy.
2007: Five judges resign and hundreds of lawyers demonstrate to protest Pakistan President Gen Pervez Musharraf’s Mar 9 removal of Supreme Court Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry, deepening a political crisis for the military leader.
2009: Five nations bordering the Arctic Sea say the survival of polar bears depends on how well humans fight climate change, the biggest threat facing the giant carnivores.
2010: Yemen’s president declares the country’s six-year war with northern rebels over, saying the Shiite militants are living up to a ceasefire agreement signed last month.
2011: Co-founder of the National Dance Theatre Company (NDTC) in Jamaica Sheila Barnett dies after a prolonged illness. The US fires more than 100 cruise missiles from the sea while French fighter jets target Moammar Gadhafi’s forces from the air, launching the broadest international military effort since the Iraq war in support of an uprising that had seemed on the verge of defeat.
2013: Iraqi insurgents send a bloody message on the eve of the 10th anniversary of the US-led invasion, carrying out a wave of bombings across the country that killed at least 65 people in the deadliest day in Iraq this year. Harry Reems, 65, co-star of the 1972 adult-film classic Deep Throat, dies in Salt Lake City.
2017: Fire breaks out in the foothills near downtown Boulder, Colorado, forcing the evacuation of hundreds of residents.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
David Livingstone, British explorer-missionary (1813-1873); Sergei Diaghilev, Russian choreographer (1872-1929); Max Reger, German composer (1873-1916); Paul Atkinson, US guitarist/music producer (1947-2004); Ursula Andress, Swiss-born actress (1936- ); Glenn Close, US actress (1947- ); Bruce Willis, German-born US actor (1955- ); Harvey Weinstein, US film producer (1952- )
— AP/Jamaica Observer